An argument that's often made is that piracy harms content creators. That music piracy impacts the revenue that artists earn through royalties, etc. The gist of the argument is "piracy hurts those who make the content you love".
Whether you believe that or not, do you know who this DOESN'T apply to?
Do you know who receive NO royalties for their published work, and in fact must PAY just to get published? Academics.
You should feel no guilt for obtaining free scientific papers. The authors are losing nothing; their research is being seen by more people than it would otherwise.
So why do they pay to get published? Reputable academic journals serve as a clearing-house. Getting your paper published in a journal is a mark of quality, indicating that your paper has been peer-reviewed and accepted as a valid contribution to science and knowledge. And I have no problem with this; people pay for certifications all the time.
What I have a problem with is that the journal, who have already been paid to publish the article, then turn around and charge the general public for access to the article. (I guess it's usually free if you're a student, but still.) Essentially the journal is taking ownership of, and restricting the dissemination of the scientific knowledge that they were paid to publish.
Publish: from the Latin publicare, "to make public". If it's behind a paywall, it's not publically available; so technically, it's not actually published.
Consider also the rise of "predatory journals", something that can only exist because of this business model. Predatory journals basically exist to scam academics into "publishing" their work in a journal that is neither peer-reviewed nor reputable. They also make money off those who want to advance an agenda; predatory journals will happily take money to publish just about any paper, including those which were outright lies or would never pass a real peer review.
The only ones who benefit financially from all of this is the journals themselves.
So, pirating academic papers may harm the journal it's published in, as they lose out on potential access fees. But the authors don't lose anything financially. And they also don't lose any value in publishing; they are paying for the legitimacy that being reviewed and published grants their work, and the journal still receives the publishing fee. And the journals will always get plenty of money flowing in from all of the universities that provide access to their students.
Who's really losing out here? Anyway, SciHub is a thing.
Hear me out: fursona wrestling game. You get to make your fursona and their wrestling outfit then wrestle other people's fursonas (or prebuilt ones with stupid pun names like John Yeena). Eh? Eh? I dunno about you, but I'd buy it. Someone get on it! The idea's yours as long as you make a good game with it!
Twitch casual stream
I'm back with more Ikenfell! The headmistress' backstory left us with questions, so it's time to hit up the library for answers – and everyone's favorite library resource, the mysterious owl. What will they have to say to us? Come find out with me!
re: alc, shopping
I bought more stuff, a jean skirt and underwear, this is now officially a shopping spree, I need to slow the frak down
r/traa post, may contain sensitive content (without image description)
I don’t even know 🤔 https://redd.it/p7cd2u
r/traa post, may contain sensitive content (without image description)
Selective bottom dysphoria is weird https://redd.it/p73uoe
Trans woman, bisexual, someone's fiancée, forever a programmer, poly, and former total mess